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On Thu, 29 Nov 2007 10:09:18 -0500, "Eisboch"
wrote: wrote in message SNIP At my marina, boats under 20 feet pay a lower rate than the bigger boats. I think last season they were paying about $50 or $55 a foot for the 6 month season. I was paying twice that, which around here is still on the low side. They get the cheaper rate mostly because those smaller slips are in shallow water that would otherwise be of no use at all. You people are fortunate to have such reasonable slip prices. Around here, (MA) a slip costs double that, at a minimum. Scituate's town owned marina is over $100 per foot and that harbor's private marinas are at least $125 to $130 per foot last time I checked. Down here on the Cape the slips are $175/ft or more although there are a few cheaper in some less desireable areas. Some marinas charge by the actual boat LOA, some charge by the slip's capacity. That's why we bought the slips rather than lease them. The market value of the slip the Navigator is in has more than doubled since we bought it 6 years ago and there's a waiting list of buyers should we ever sell it. We also get paid 85% of collected slip fees for transient boats that use the slips if our boat is not in it. My son bought a slip even though he does not own a boat. It's purely an investment and every fall he gets a check for over 5K from the marina. When the time comes that he sells the slip, he'll get a decent return plus will have collected the 5k every year he owned it. Although we pay no slip fees, we *do* pay a yearly fee for maintenance, water and electricity. So far those fees have been around $1400-$1600 for the season. If I leased the slip we have the Navigator in, our seasonal cost would be just short of $10k. Eisboch It is threads like these that make me glad to be inland. First, I am lucky to not pay anything for storage, ramp or dock space as my mother's house is on the Ohio river and the next three properties are owned by family. We keep our own private docks and have our own ramp. However, even those that don't have this luck don't pay anything like those costs. My brother owns a property along the river that he has developed into campsites. A river frontage campsite with about 50' or so of river frontage goes for $600 per year, including electricity for the spring, summer and fall. People put small trailers on the lots and build decks and docks ( of whatever length they desire). A couple years or so and the cost difference for even a small 18 to 20 foot boat would pay for the trailer, deck and dock. No swanky clubhouse, no water or sewer(there is a restroom available on site), but no crowds and no rules to speak of (hell you even get to bring in gas/diesel in cans if you don't want to use the marina pumps just down the river). Probably wouldn't fit the lifestyle of many here and he difinitley has no $500,000 yachts parked there, but would work for me if I didn't have "mom's place". Dave Hall |
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